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Night And The World Remained Silent Rhetorical Analysis

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Night Essay
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Why did Elie Wiesel choose to rename the book “Night” rather than keep the previous title “The World Remained Silent” for his story of his Holocaust experience? The both fit the book well but Night has a more figurative meaning compared to “The World Remained Silent” which is very literal and you don’t have to really think about why the title is what it is. I think Night is a much better choice of a title because it has multiple meanings of what it could be and the reader can decide and choose their own interpretation on it rather than having a set meaning which removes a lot of the effect of having a title that the reader can create their own meaning for and have it mean something to them rather than it being just a title. …show more content…
Throughout the whole book more than half of my motifs were related to silence. For example when Elie and his family was leaving their town towards the station to be transported to Auschwitz he notes that “The town seemed deserted. But behind the shutters, our friends of yesterday were probably waiting for the moment when they could loot our homes.” (Wiesel 22) This whole situation only affected a set number of people so the unaffected people didn’t care about what happened to Jewish people and just cared about looting their homes and taking advantage of the whole situation. They did not look or even care that their neighbors and maybe even friends were being taken away from their community and being forced to leave behind their current lives for whatever may lay ahead. Because of the cruel behavior of the community and the lack of reaction is the main reason why the title “The World Remains Silent” is near perfect for this situation. Sadly not only this small community kept silent and did nothing but most of the world did so as well. The most surprising factor of this whole event was that no one cared. This is shown when Elie states “How was it possible that men, women, and children were being burned and that the world kept silent?” (Wiesel 32) Both of these factors made the title “And The World Remained Silent” quite fitting for everything that was going on

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